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      19 Mar 2011

      Reviewing Historians’ Fallacies

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      A friend recommended and lent me Historians’ Fallacies: Toward a Logic of Historical Thought. I must say I immensely enjoyed David Hackett Fischer’s work. He was devastatingly thorough and acutely witty.

      The book is a collection of fallacies divided into three large categories: inquiry, explanation, and argument. Each section has a few chapters of fallacies of various subsections. An excellent quality is that it is easy to skip around and read individual fallacies without having to read the rest of the book.   To give an example of his wit, this quotation is culled from footnote 48 of his chapter ‘Fallacies of Factual Significance’ discussing the pragmatic fallacy:

      By temperament and conviction [Staughton Lynd] is not an observer but a participant. He enthusiastically endorses an aphorism paraphrased from Marx’s Theses on Feuerbach: “The Historians have interpreted the world; the thing, however, is to change it.” To this declaration Lynd adds a rhetorical question of his own: “Should we be content with measuring the dimensions of our prison instead of chipping away, however inadequately, against the bars? For many years Lynd has working like a beaver at the prison bars—not with a file but with a file card. (fn 48: The task is tough enough, given Lynd’s choice of tools. But the trouble is compounded by the fact that Lynd and his radical friends believe that the great penitentiary in which they live—i.e., American society—is cunningly constructed with invisible bars. He has worked for years at what he thinks is an invisible bar, only to discover that it is really a space between them, and that the work must begin again. This cycle has been repeated several times in Lynd’s scholarly career.) p. 83–4

       

      And one that strikes to my writing the fallacy of argument ad verecundiam (an argument to authority [literally, modesty]) of which one of the subtile forms is appeal to pedantic words or phrases, of which Fischer comments, ‘is committed by scholars who never use a little word when a big one will do.’ (p. 285) (Of course had I written it, it’d read, ‘…who never utilize a diminutive vocable when a sesquipedalian term will suffice.

      Fischer emphasizes that historians who commit fallacies are not necessarily attempting to deceive or even necessarily bad historians. Good historians compose historical arguments akin to chain mail not chains. If a link if weak in chain mail it does not render the mail ineffective unless of course it is a vital area. He also concludes with a section on the utility of history, primarily by understanding the past we further understand the present and can better deal with its hostilities.   I liked this book so much I bought it; Amazon.com should deliver my copy on Wednesday.

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      13 Jan 2011

      Review: The Wages of Spin (Part 1 of 2)

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      The Wages of Spin is a great read. Carl Trueman writes with his characteristic British humour to analyse various aspects of contemporary evangelicalism. As the essays don’t have much of a common them beyond that I’ll analyse them separately below. The book itself is divided into two parts: evangelical essays and short sharp stacks and so I’ll split my blog posts as well. 

      Essay 1: Reckoning with the Past in an Anti-Historical Age

      In this first essay, Carl Trueman reminds us that Christianity is an historical faith; of course this sharply contrasts with our postmodern age. He stresses that confessional Reformed theology (as well as confessional Lutheranism and conservative evangelicalism) is at a crossroads. This is a useful essay in its analysis of the current situation and as prescription for remedy.

      The essay expounds antihistorical tendencies of the postmodern world. Particularly, we moderns are adverse to tradition; consider the Enlightenment which labelled the age before it as dark. Consumerism emphasises the novel: how else could they sell you the latest thing? Moreover, postmodernist deconstructionism have made all truth (including history) mere power plays. 

      How has the Church reacted? Largely in one of two ways, argues Carl Trueman. Either by jettisoning the past including traditional Christian liturgy and focussing on the pragmatic (mainstream evangelicalism) or selectively embracing the past with no regard for its context (emergent churches). Carl uses an example of Celtic Christianity revival which I am not familiar with (but may be more prevalent in the UK). I personally suspect most evangelicals in America follow the first route. 

      The essay offers two theses to study historical orthodox Reformed tradition in this post-Christian world. Thesis One: The Reformed tradition takes seriously the biblical teaching that God is primarily a speaking God. The Reformation was a movement rooted in words and one of the effects was the literacy of the populace. Contrast this with both the mediaeval and postmodern aesthetic centred on the visual. Thesis Two: The Reformed Faith appreciates the beneficial aspects of history and tradition. It is against mindless iconoclasm. ‘The Reformed church, with its creeds, confessions, catechisms, and theological tradition, provides its people with the historical continuity that so many crave today…’ (p. 34) Consider the Reformed scholastics (and Reformed theologians of different eras) who interacted with history and other traditions in their writings. But the last word I’ll leave to Trueman:

      We might add, finally, that when we lose sight of God’s work in the past we may easily also lose sight of his work in the future, of the eschatological dimension of the Christian faith.…Reformed theology, by giving due place to history in God’s purposes, points beyond the present to a bright future in eschatological glory and thus does justice to the biblical tension involved in living in the world between Pentecost and the Parousia.

      Essay 2: The Undoing of the Reformation?
      Picking up a theme of the previous essay, Trueman writes on the importance of the spoken and written word. In many ways with the advent of the internet (of course TV also has an influence) we again have a mediaeval aesthetic of the visual. As a counterpoint I might mention the influence of e-books and podcasts which focus on the spoken and written, but overall I think Trueman’s statement is sound. Trueman does concede something similar, also reminding us when we apply for a loan, the loan manager does not do an interpretive dance for us. 

      Carl Trueman recounts the confusion of the languages at Babel and the antiparallel at Pentecost where the gospel was heard in many languages. He also expounds on the reformers (both Lutheran and Reformed) the Word precedes the sacraments. (That is, the sacraments are not sacraments without the Word explaining them.) We see that God is primarily a speaking God. 

      Trueman comments, ‘[I]t is clear that the denial of any role to authorial intent in determining the meaning of a text is lethal to evangelical Christianity.’ His critique of postmodernism is right on. Of course, modernism is no friend to Christianity either. Carl finishes with a great point, one of the features of TV is that it has conditioned us to relate to stories. ‘What an opportunity for the church! Is it not wonderful that God himself has provided us with the greatest story ever told?’

      Essay 3: Theology and the Church: Divorce or Remarriage?

      I must confess I don’t know much about the academy so I won’t have much to say on this. (I realize this isn’t a problem for most bloggers...) This essay discussed the relation between the church and the academy. Trueman outlines ‘grounds for divorce’ and proposes four theses for the church and four for the academy to reunite them for the glory of God.

      Essay 4: The Princeton Trajectory on Scripture: A Clarification and Proposal

      This essay interacts with various models of inspiration and inerrancy of Scripture. Trueman discusses Old Princeton, particularly B B Warfield. Warfield, he argues, is still relevant for today, although a development of the human composition of Scripture would be useful. This may serve to alleviate concern the Princetonians held to a view of inspiration akin to the authors of Scripture copying the words verbatim from God.

      Essay 5: The Glory of Christ: B B Warfield on Jesus of Nazareth

      Carl Trueman introduces us to an aspect of B B Warfield beyond the three topics he is usually remembered for (inspiration and inerrancy of Scripture, cessation of miraculous gifts, and his support of theistic evolution). The essay shows B B Warfield’s work on the Incarnation and the person and work of Jesus Christ. Not being familiar with his view on this, was was interested to read the essay. It has created a desire to read B B Warfield’s writings and learn more about him. That is, of course, one of the greatest things an essay can accomplish.

      Essay 6: Is the Finnish Line the New Beginning? A Critical Assessment of the Reading of Luther Offered by the Helsinki Circle

      While I am most certainly unqualified to write on this essay, as I had not heard of Tuomo Mannnermaa and the Helsinki Circle’s efforts to link Luther’s doctrine on justification with the Eastern Orthodox doctrine of theosis, if Trueman is correct, that the contributions of scholar Heiko Oberman is absent from the writings of the Helsinki Circle, it is certainly to the detriment of their views. 

      Part Two Follows
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      6 Nov 2009

      An Interesting Aside: The Origin of the Individual Soul

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      Part of our study guide for our Men's Christian Education Class included a discussion of the origin of the individual soul. I was intrigued by this and wrote a short review of the issue. Attached is the original document. 

      Definitions:

      Traducianism—The soul is propagated along with the body by natural generation. I.e., we received our souls from our parents.

      Creationism—God creates each soul specially for the fœtus in utero. 

      (Pre-existentianism—All souls existed in a previous state before birth, often coupled with the belief in a fall of humans in this spirit state before Adam in Eden. This is listed a note of historical interest. Origen [d. 254], who was the principal proponent of this view was anathematized in the Second Council of Constantinople in 553.)

      A Brief History

      This question has been debated since the early church. Tertullian (d. c. 220) first proposed traducianism to explain the transmission of original sin (by inheritance). Traducianism became popular in the western regions of the Church (including northern Africa) but the eastern regions of the Church held to creationism. As noted, Origen held to the preëxistence of souls, but is not widely received outside of Alexandria. Augustine (d. 430) was undecided on the issue. The Scholastics (1100-1500) all held creationism although some of the earlier Schoolmen viewed creationism as more probable but not certain. In the Reformation, Luther favoured traducianism, but Calvin espoused creationism. As covenant theology developed, the notion of inherited original sin was replaced with the concept of the federal headship of Adam acting on behalf of humanity in the covenant of works. 

      Some Proponents of Each Position:

      Traducians:

      Tertullian d. 220
      Gregory of Nyssa d. 394
      Martin Luther d. 1546
      Jonathan Edwards d. 1758
      W. G. T. Shedd d. 1894
      A. H. Strong d. 1924
      Gordon Clark d. 1985

      Creationists:

      Hilary of Picavium d. 368
      Jerome d.420 
      Peter Lombard d. 1160
      Thomas Aquinas d. 1274
      John Calvin d. 1564
      Francis Turritin d. 1687
      Herman Bavinck d. 1921
      Louis Berkhof d. 1957
      Wayne Grudem b. 1948

      Scripture References:

      Cited for traducianism:

      Genesis 2:2 

      And on the seventh day God finished his work that he had done, and he rested on the seventh day from all his work that he had done.
      Genesis 5:3 
      When Adam had lived 130 years, he fathered a son in his own likeness, after his image, and named him Seth. 
      John 1:13
      who were born, not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man, but of God.
      Acts 17:26
      And he made from one man every nation of mankind to live on all the face of the earth, having determined allotted periods and the boundaries of their dwelling place,
      Romans 1:3 
      concerning his Son, who was descended from David according to the flesh
      Hebrews 7:9-10 
      One might even say that Levi himself, who receives tithes, paid tithes through Abraham, for he was still in the loins of his ancestor when Melchizedek met him.

      Cited for creationism:

      Numbers 16:22 
      And they fell on their faces and said, “O God, the God of the spirits of all flesh, shall one man sin, and will you be angry with all the congregation?”
      Ecclesiastes 12:7
      and the dust returns to the earth as it was, and the spirit returns to God who gave it.
      Isaiah 42:5
      Thus says God, the Lord,
      who created the heavens and stretched them out,
      who spread out the earth and what comes from it,
      who gives breath to the people on it
      and spirit to those who walk in it:
      Zechariah 12:1
      The burden of the word of the Lord concerning Israel: Thus declares the Lord, who stretched out the heavens and founded the earth and formed the spirit of man within him:
      Hebrews 12:9
      Besides this, we have had earthly fathers who disciplined us and we respected them. Shall we not much more be subject to the Father of spirits and live?

      A Brief Overview of the Debate

      Arguments for traducianism:

      1. God largely ceased from his creative work after the creation week, now working ordinarily through secondary causes. 

      2. Explains of how original sin is transmitted without invoking God directly creating souls for evil.

      Rebuttals against traducianism:

      1. Regeneration is a new creative process which does not depend on secondary causes

      2. The imputation original sin does not require the inheritance model of transmillion.

      Objections to traducianism:

      1. It is against the philosophical doctrine of the simplexity of the soul. To avoid arguing that the soul is divided from or a composite of the parents’ souls, traducians sometimes propose a. the soul is potentially present in the seed of the man and/or the woman which is materialism or b. the soul is brought forth by the parents, which makes the parents creators in a sense.

      2. Traducianism is usually believed together with a form of (Platonic) realism. This accounts for the original guilt via the numerical unity of man and the inheritance of original sin. However this cannot explain why men are only held responsible for the first sin of Adam and not his later sins or the sins of all their ancestors

      3. Realism leads to problems with Christology. If human nature as a whole sinned in Adam (who at that time contained the whole of human nature) and this sin is the actual sin of every part of that human nature ‘then the conclusion cannot be escaped that the human nature of Christ was also sinful and guilty because it had actually sinned in Adam.’ (Berkhof)

      Rebuttals to objections to traducianism:

      1. Simplexity properly belongs to God. Shedd argues by analogy that the lighting of a second candle by the first is similar to psychical propagation. A. the potentiality may be present with but not in the seed and b. in other aspects humans in some sense are creators working with existing materials to bring forth new things. 

      2. Realism is not a necessary component of traducianism but if one holds to it then it may be argued the sins of Adam and Eve before and after the fall are of a different type. Whereas before the fall sin was against the probationary statute, after they were transgressions of the moral law. Also the subsequent sins of men were not committed by the entire race in and with Adam; after propagation Adam was not the whole of the human race but only a fraction.

      3. The sinless nature of Christ is not problematic if a miraculous conception is held. Shedd argues that ‘So far, then, as the guilt of Adam's sin rested upon that unindividualizcd portion of the common fallen nature of Adam assumed by the Logos, it was expiated by the one sacrifice on Calvary. The human nature of Christ was prepared for the personal union with the Logos, by being justified, as well as sanctified.’

      Arguments for creationism:

      1. It is more consistent with the Scriptural idea of the body being of the earth and the spirit being of God.

      2. It preserves better the distinction of the immaterial nature of the soul. 

      Rebuttals against creationism:

      1. and 2. It is incorrect to associate propagation with materialism; it is not outside of God’s power to propagate the spirit.

      Objections to creationism:

      1. Creationism makes God the author of evil either a. directly by creating a soul with evil tendencies or b. by united a pure soul with a body with will inevitably corrupt it.

      2. It makes the parents the progenitors of only the body of the child and limits the race of men to just the flesh. By contrast the animals reproduce after their kind. Creationism does not account for the observation that not just physical characteristics are inherited but personality traits and peculiarities which run in families, even when the parents do not raise their children.

      Rebuttals to objections to creationism:

      1. While this is a difficult problem, however the creationist does not regard original sin entirely as a result of inheritance. ‘The descendants of Adam are sinners, not as a result of their being brought into contact with a sinful body, but in virtue of the fact that God imputes to them the original disobedience of Adam. And it is for this reason that God withholds from them original righteousness, and the pollution of sin naturally follows.

      2. God can create souls adapted to particular situations or perhaps the union with the body influences the soul. Also we are not certain the extent of the role environment plays.


      Conclusion

      The arguments on both sides of the debate are well-balanced and Scripture gives no clear support to either position. Perhaps Deuteronomy 29.29 speaks best to this discussion, “The secret things belong to the Lord our God, but the things that are revealed belong to us and to our children forever, that we may do all the words of this law.”


      Trivia:

      The word traducian has a shared root with tradition and traitor. Each of these words deals with the concept of something being handed over.


      Bibliography

      Berkhof, Systematic Theology

      Shedd, Dogmatic Theology

      Williamson, The Westminster Confession: A Study Guide

       

      Further reading:

      Turretin, Creationism or Traducianism?

      Clark, Traducianism



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    A twenty-something confessional Presbyterian writing from Tucson, Az.

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